Texas abortion provider closes two clinics, citing new law

DALLAS (Reuters) - Two more Texas abortion providers said
they will shut down this week, saying their doctors were unable
to get admitting privileges to nearby hospitals as required
under new restrictions enacted by the state last year.

Proponents of new regulations say they were designed to
protect women's health. Women's rights groups have complained
that they were designed to put abortion clinics out of business
and have already succeeded in eliminating a third of them. Women
in parts of Texas now must drive for hours to reach a clinic.

Whole Women's Health will close two of its five clinics in
the state, shutting facilities in McAllen and Beaumont because
they cannot meet the new regulations, including one that a
physician have admitting privileges at an appropriately equipped
hospital within 30 miles (48 kms).

The reduction will cut the number of abortion providers in
the state to 19 from 32 before the restrictions went in place,
according to the group and state data.

"After serving women in these communities for over 10 years,
Texas politicians have forced us to shut our doors," Whole
Women's Health said in a statement.

Admitting privileges allow doctors to admit patients to a
hospital for treatment. The privileges are usually given to
doctors who are on staff at the hospital.

The Texas Hospital Association, which represents more the
400 hospitals, called the restrictions burdensome and
unnecessary because women experiencing abortion complications
can go to a hospital emergency room and be treated.

Opponents argue that, given that Texas has vast areas with
sparse population, the admitting privileges requirement places
an unjust burden on clinics and punishes people in rural parts
of the state where medical care can be scarce.

Backers of the regulations argue the measures put in place
necessary safeguards aimed to improving public health.

"We are pleased that women will never again receive
substandard care from either of these abortion facilities," Joe
Pojman, director of the anti-abortion group Texas Alliance for
Life, said of the closures.

More U.S. states have passed sweeping abortion restrictions
in the last two years than in the previous decade, according to
the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports the
right to abortion but whose research is cited by both sides in
the debate.

The Oklahoma House of Representatives last week passed a
bill with an admitting privileges requirement almost identical
to the one in Texas.

In September, the remaining abortion providers in Texas face
an expensive hurdle when another rule takes effect that imposes
surgical center standards for clinics, even those that perform
nonsurgical medication abortions.

Whole Women's Health founder Amy Hagstrom Miller said this
will force more clinics to shut down because of the enormous
sums of money needed to make the changes.

"There's a lot of us facing closures in September unless we
can figure out something else," she said.

Planned Parenthood has said the requirement could leave the
state of 26 million people with as few as six abortion centers.

Federal courts have so far upheld the Texas law but
opponents have filed appeals seeking to ease some of its
restrictions.